Harris County Police Blotter Lookup

Harris County police blotter records provide details on arrests, incident reports, and crime activity across this west-central Georgia county with Hamilton as the county seat. Sheriff Mike Jolley leads the Harris County Sheriff's Office, which serves as the main law enforcement agency. You can search police blotter entries by calling the sheriff's office or by visiting in person. State-level tools also pull in Harris County records. Georgia's Open Records Act gives the public the right to request these files, and online databases offer free access to offender records and arrest data connected to Harris County.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Harris County Quick Facts

Hamilton County Seat
Mike Jolley Sheriff
(706) 628-4211 Sheriff Phone
159 GA Counties Total

Harris County Police Blotter Office

The Harris County Sheriff's Office operates from PO Box 286 in Hamilton. Sheriff Mike Jolley heads the department. Call (706) 628-4211 for the main line. Deputies serve the entire county. Every arrest, call for service, and incident report becomes part of the Harris County police blotter.

Harris County borders Alabama to the west and sits just north of Columbus. The county is mostly residential and rural, with Callaway Gardens and other attractions drawing visitors. Hamilton is the county seat. Pine Mountain and Waverly Hall are other communities in the area. Despite the rural nature of Harris County, the sheriff's office keeps a full log of all law enforcement activity. Property crimes, traffic stops, drug cases, and domestic calls all show up on the police blotter here.

Under O.C.G.A. § 50-18-70, police blotter records are public in Harris County. You have the right to see the initial incident report. No reason is needed. The sheriff's office must respond within three business days per O.C.G.A. § 50-18-71. Copies cost up to 10 cents per page. The first 15 minutes of staff time are free.

Office Harris County Sheriff's Office
Address PO Box 286, Hamilton, GA 31811
Phone (706) 628-4211
Sheriff Mike Jolley

Harris County Police Blotter Records

Georgia's Open Records Act lets anyone request police blotter records from the Harris County Sheriff's Office. There is no residency requirement. You do not have to state a purpose. The act covers arrest reports, incident logs, booking records, and all other files the office creates or stores.

Under O.C.G.A. § 50-18-72, certain records are exempt. Files from active investigations or pending prosecutions can be withheld. Confidential source identities stay sealed. Information that could put someone at risk is also protected. But the first police blotter entry, the initial report, is almost always public in Harris County. Put your request in writing and send it to PO Box 286, Hamilton, GA 31811. That starts the three-day response window under state law.

Note: Accident reports from state roads require a written statement of need under O.C.G.A. § 50-18-72(a)(5), but standard police blotter entries do not.

State Patrol Police Blotter in Harris County

Georgia State Patrol troopers make their own police blotter records in Harris County. They patrol I-185, US-27, and state highways in the area. Their reports are not part of the sheriff's files. The EPORTS system is how you get them.

EPORTS charges $5.00 for crash reports, $2.00 for incident reports, and nothing for your first citation. Extra citations within 24 hours cost $1.00 each. Reports take three to five business days to show up. Harris County has I-185 running through it, which generates state patrol activity. If the incident was on a state road, try EPORTS first for the Harris County police blotter entry.

Use the EPORTS portal for state patrol records in Harris County. EPORTS portal for Harris County police blotter searches

EPORTS covers state-generated reports only. For Harris County sheriff's office records, contact the office in Hamilton.

GBI Crime Information for Harris County

The GBI holds statewide crime data that includes Harris County. You can submit an open records request through the GBI Records Request Center for investigative files. Criminal history checks need the subject's consent under O.C.G.A. § 35-3-34 unless it is a Georgia felony conviction.

The Georgia Sex Offender Registry is free to search for registered offenders in Harris County. The GDC offender search covers state prison inmates. It does not include the Harris County jail. For jail info, call (706) 628-4211. Booking data is part of the police blotter and is public under Georgia law.

What Harris County Reports Show

A police blotter entry from Harris County lists the date, time, and location of the event. It gives a summary of what happened. Arrests include the person's name and charges. The officer who responded is also listed.

Certain facts get redacted from public copies under Georgia law. Phone numbers, day and month of birth, and medical details are removed. The public version is what you get. If you are part of the case or have legal counsel on a related matter, a more complete copy may be available from the Harris County Sheriff's Office. The Georgia Sheriffs' Association directory is a good way to check contact info before you file a request.

Georgia Department of Corrections offender search for Harris County police blotter related records

The GDC offender query tool covers state prison inmates. It does not include people held in the Harris County jail.

Harris County Blotter Record Fees

Fees for police blotter records in Harris County follow state guidelines. Copies are up to 10 cents per page. Certified copies add $2.00. The first quarter hour of search time is free. After that, the rate matches the lowest-paid qualified worker at the Harris County Sheriff's Office. See the DPS fee schedule for the full breakdown.

EPORTS crash reports cost $5.00 and incident reports cost $2.00 for state patrol records. The Harris County Sheriff's Office may set its own rates for local records. Call ahead to check.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Nearby Counties

These counties share borders with Harris County. If an incident happened near the county line, check with both agencies to see who handled the call.